Tranexamic acid versus placebo to reduce perioperative blood transfusion in patients undergoing liver resection: Protocol for the haemorrhage during liver resection tranexamic acid (HeLiX) randomised controlled trial Journal Article


Authors: Karanicolas, P. J.; Lin, Y.; McCluskey, S.; Roke, R.; Tarshis, J.; Thorpe, K. E.; Ball, C. G.; Chaudhury, P.; Cleary, S. P.; Dixon, E.; Eeson, G.; Moulton, C. A.; Nanji, S.; Porter, G.; Ruo, L.; Skaro, A. I.; Tsang, M.; Wei, A. C.; Guyatt, G.; The HepatoPancreaticoBiliary Community of Surgical ONcologists: Clinical, Evaluative, and Prospective Trials (HPB CONCEPT) Team
Article Title: Tranexamic acid versus placebo to reduce perioperative blood transfusion in patients undergoing liver resection: Protocol for the haemorrhage during liver resection tranexamic acid (HeLiX) randomised controlled trial
Abstract: Introduction Despite use of operative and non-operative interventions to reduce blood loss during liver resection, 20%-40% of patients receive a perioperative blood transfusion. Extensive intraoperative blood loss is a major risk factor for postoperative morbidity and mortality and receipt of blood transfusion is associated with serious risks including an association with long-term cancer recurrence and overall survival. In addition, blood products are scarce and associated with appreciable expense; decreasing blood transfusion requirements would therefore have health system benefits. Tranexamic acid (TXA), an antifibrinolytic, has been shown to reduce the probability of receiving a blood transfusion by one-third for patients undergoing cardiac or orthopaedic surgery. However, its applicability in liver resection has not been widely researched. Methods and analysis This protocol describes a prospective, blinded, randomised controlled trial being conducted at 10 sites in Canada and 1 in the USA. 1230 eligible and consenting participants will be randomised to one of two parallel groups: experimental (2 g of intravenous TXA) or placebo (saline) administered intraoperatively. The primary endpoint is receipt of blood transfusion within 7 days of surgery. Secondary outcomes include blood loss, postoperative complications, quality of life and 5-year disease-free and overall survival. Ethics and dissemination This trial has been approved by the research ethics boards at participating centres and Health Canada (parent control number 177992) and is currently enrolling participants. All participants will provide written informed consent. Results will be distributed widely through local and international meetings, presentation, publication and ClinicalTrials.gov. Trial registration number NCT02261415. ©
Keywords: clinical trials; hepatobiliary surgery; blood bank & transfusion medicine; hepatobiliary tumours
Journal Title: BMJ Open
Volume: 12
Issue: 2
ISSN: 2044-6055
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.  
Date Published: 2022-02-01
Start Page: e058850
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058850
PUBMED: 35210348
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8883280
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 April 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Alice Chia-Chi Wei
    197 Wei